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IMDbPro

Ana

Original title: Real Women Have Curves
  • 2002
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
8.7K
YOUR RATING
America Ferrera in Ana (2002)
Home Video Trailer from HBO Home Video
Play trailer0:34
1 Video
26 Photos
Coming-of-AgeComedyDrama

In East Los Angeles, an 18-year-old struggles between her ambitions of going to college and the desires of her domineering mother for her to get married, have children, and oversee the small... Read allIn East Los Angeles, an 18-year-old struggles between her ambitions of going to college and the desires of her domineering mother for her to get married, have children, and oversee the small, rundown family-owned textile factory.In East Los Angeles, an 18-year-old struggles between her ambitions of going to college and the desires of her domineering mother for her to get married, have children, and oversee the small, rundown family-owned textile factory.

  • Director
    • Patricia Cardoso
  • Writers
    • Josefina Lopez
    • George LaVoo
  • Stars
    • America Ferrera
    • Lupe Ontiveros
    • Ingrid Oliu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    8.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Patricia Cardoso
    • Writers
      • Josefina Lopez
      • George LaVoo
    • Stars
      • America Ferrera
      • Lupe Ontiveros
      • Ingrid Oliu
    • 113User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Real Women Have Curves
    Trailer 0:34
    Real Women Have Curves

    Photos26

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    America Ferrera
    America Ferrera
    • Ana Garcia
    Lupe Ontiveros
    Lupe Ontiveros
    • Carmen Garcia
    Ingrid Oliu
    Ingrid Oliu
    • Estela Garcia
    George Lopez
    George Lopez
    • Mr. Guzman
    Brian Sites
    Brian Sites
    • Jimmy
    Soledad St. Hilaire
    Soledad St. Hilaire
    • Pancha
    Lourdes Perez Nido
    • Rosali
    • (as Lourdes Perez)
    Jorge Cervera Jr.
    • Raúl Garcia
    Felipe de Alba
    • Grandfather
    José Gerardo Zamora Jr.
    • Juan José
    Edgar Lujan
    • Juan Martin
    Lina Acosta
    Lina Acosta
    • Norma
    Celina Belizan
    • Glitz Receptionist
    • (as Celina Belazin)
    Ramona Garcia Coronado
    • Singing Woman
    Marlene Forte
    Marlene Forte
    • Mrs. Glass
    Jim Ishida
    Jim Ishida
    • Landlord
    • (as Jimmy Ishida)
    Agapito Leal
    • Dr. Lopez
    • (as Pete Leal)
    Josefina Lopez
    Josefina Lopez
    • Veronica
    • Director
      • Patricia Cardoso
    • Writers
      • Josefina Lopez
      • George LaVoo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews113

    6.98.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Buddy-51

    endearing slice-of-life drama

    `Real Women Have Curves' feels a bit like a modern ethnic version of `Georgy Girl,' featuring a free-spirited young woman named Ana who doesn't quite fit the mold of what society believes a woman should look like.

    Ana is a somewhat `overweight' high school senior living in East LA who has dreams of being the first person in her family to go to college. Her parents, however, have other plans for her life, which basically involve marriage, motherhood and a job working in her older sister's dress factory. Ana faces the struggle common to many young people who happen to be first-generation Americans: should she conform to the old-fashioned customs and traditions of her family or should she set out to make it on her own with all the advantages and opportunities available to people in this society? `Real Women Have Curves' avoids becoming a culture clash cliché through its keen observation of the minutiae of everyday life. Unlike most films, `Real Women' actually explores the day-to-day struggles of the working class in this country. The people in this film worry about whether or not they will be able to make a go of their businesses, whether or not their bills will get paid, whether or not a promising young student will be allowed to go to college and make something of herself or just end up as a cog in the system that absorbs so many of the underclass. It's these slice-of-life details that make the film interesting.

    Ana's main foil is her own mother, who believes not only that her daughter is overweight and, thereby, ruining her chances to make an acceptable marriage, but that she must forego college in order to help with the family business. The majority of the conflict in the film occurs between these two women, both equally hardheaded, moody and determined to get what they want. America Ferrara as Ana, Lupe Ontiveras as her mother and Ingrid Oliu as Estela, her hardworking, levelheaded sister, create characters who are believable, subtle and instantly recognizable. Writers Josefina Lopez and George LaVoo have a sharp ear for the way people actually speak. Director Patricia Cardoso doesn't try to impress us with fancy camera angles or clever cutting. Instead, she lets the story develop naturally, allowing us to eavesdrop on a milieu that may seem strange to some of us. Cardoso knows full well that the universal nature of what she is showing us will draw us into the story and these characters' lives. It's nice, too, to see a film in which the young people are spending their time trying to get into good colleges instead of indulging in all the high school hijinks and hoopla we usually see in more mainstream movies these days.

    True, the movie does sacrifice some of its verisimilitude by trying a bit too hard to be a `feel good' experience. One occasionally senses a certain straining for the upbeat moral message, as when Ana convinces her coworkers to strip down to their undies in the factory as a statement about how women should not be ashamed of their bodies just because they aren't a size six. But the film more than makes up for that in the unconventional way in which it treats Ana's departure from her mother at the end.

    `Real Women Have Curves' is a small movie but a universal one.
    8LordBlacklist

    Reality comes through

    Real Women Have Curves is a very enjoyable film, and also a very real film. It deals with very real issues concerning women and especially young women. The main character is of the Hispanic persuasion and though she is a very bright girl and could possibly get into a good collage she runs the risk of being swallowed up in the death trap job of making dresses that cost them 18 dollars to make but get sold in department stores for 800 dollars. Her mother keeps telling her she's overweight overlooking the fact that she is heavier than her daughter. This film is very much set in the real world, and the problems facing the characters are problems we all face at one time or another like "can I pay the rent on time?" or "will this person like me for who I am instead of what I look like?" Within the context of the film the answers to those questions are yes, and yes which may be one of the reasons this film is so enjoyable. America Ferrera's performance is reminiscent of the kind of girl you would see at your local high school, and the message of this movie is one that more people should take to heart. Be who you are, not who others want you to be, follow your dreams, and the like. I was surprised with how frankly this film deals with teenage sexuality, and how it challenges the concept of what beauty is in modern culture makes it a very progressive film indeed.
    JohnDeSando

    It is a hymn to a culture that values family and a girl who values herself.

    How could I be so blessed with 2 Mexican treasures within weeks of each other? After the heady romanticism and visual artistry of Julie Taymor's `Frida,' I was hardly prepared to see another arresting, Mexican melodrama, Patricia Cardoso's `Real Women Have Curves.' Every woman who thinks about her weight should see this movie-it will make you a convert to the humane notion that all bodies are beautiful. And it will reveal a deeply humane culture at the same time.

    Naturally beautiful and full-bodied actress America Ferrera plays Ana, a Mexican American whose graduation and scholarship to Columbia University threaten the family's unity and the control by her mother, who tells stories of runaway girls with disastrous ends and the admonition, `That's what happens to girls who don't listen to their mothers.'

    Like teenagers in any culture, Ana is trying to break away from a domineering culture and mother while she also achieves a balanced acceptance of her zaftig body. The scene where she and the other seamstresses in her sister's sweat shop remove their outer clothes to escape the heat and eventually admire their bulging, stretch-marked bodies is about as loving and lyrical as any other I have seen where Hollywood's obsession with world-class beauty is obliterated by the sheer attractiveness of women celebrating the imperfections of their bodies.

    Equally so, when Ana loses her virginity, she tells her lover,

    "Turn the lights on. I want you to see me. See, this is what I look like." He responds, "You're not fat. You're beautiful.' It's easy to see why this film won awards at Cannes for audience appreciation and ensemble acting. It is a hymn to a culture that values family and a girl who values herself.
    GrrrlVicious

    Comments on the Film

    A coming of age story in which Ana (America Ferrera) deals with the effects of tradition, gender, social class and race on her future and on her family. The cinematic gaze on Ana is that she is a healthy sized Latin woman with curves and intelligence coming from a lower class family. Certain stereotypes of Latin people and women are reinforced in this movie in the form of Ana's mother, Carmen (Lupe Ontiveros) and sister, Estela (Ingrid Oliu), which are then in turn critiqued by Ana. For example, Ana's sister owns a clothing sweat-shop which relies on the upper class white people for everything. Estela fears the upper/dominant/powerful class, while Ana confronts them and makes her demands perfectly clear without compromising herself. Ana's mother has revolved her life around getting married and raising a family, while Ana refuses to compromise her future and dreams by taking a husband and household on before she really wants to.

    The movie revolves primarily around Ana's college application. This is the plot device whose effects progress the film. The scholarship to the University is dependent upon the fact that Ana is a minority, and without the scholarship, Ana and her family make it clear that they could not financially afford to send Ana to college, which would then reproduce stereotypes of women and minorities of being less financially stable.

    Eventually, both despite and with the help of her gender, race and social and economic class, Ana is able to advance herself and develop a sense of confidence in herself and her identity.
    8Rogue-32

    America, America!

    Thanks to a beautifully subtle script, equally subtle direction and brilliant performances from all the leads, Real Women Have Curves comes across as a superbly soulful and insightful slice of life. The always great Lupe Ontiveros is maddeningly tragic as the selfish mother who stubbornly refuses to see beyond her own needs, and America Ferrera blazes across the screen in blissful defiance - the smart girl who instinctively knows she's more than just the sum of her body parts and finds the strength inside herself to back up that belief with or without her mother's blessing. Kudos to everyone connected with this enlightened and enlightening movie.

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    Related interests

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    Coming-of-Age
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The producers put out a casting call for girls who were "fat" or "overweight", and had thousands of girls show up who were clearly not fat or overweight, but all thought that they were.
    • Goofs
      Ana's boyfriend, about to graduate from high school, says he will now go to "Teachers College." Teachers College is a graduate school only; it has no undergraduate program.
    • Quotes

      Estela: [after giving Ana a dress she made especially for her] Pretty dresses aren't just for skinny girls.

    • Connections
      Featured in HBO First Look: Real Women Have Curves (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Chica Dificil
      Written by Héctor Buitrago and Andrea Echeverri

      Performed by Aterciopelados

      Courtesy of BMG Latin

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 21, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Las mujeres verdaderas tienen curvas
    • Filming locations
      • Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California, USA(Ana Garcia's house)
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Newmarket Films
      • LaVoo Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,853,194
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $183,772
      • Oct 20, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,777,790
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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